- #1
Cyrus
- 3,238
- 17
In stewart, page 806 he says:
"In the special case in which the equation of a surface S is of the form z=f(x,y) (that is, S is the graph of a function f of two variables), we can write the equation as
F(x,y,z) = f(x,y) - z = 0
and regard S as a level surface (with k=0) of F. Then
Fx(x0,y0,z0) = fx(x0,y0)
Fy(x0,y0,z0) = fy(x0,y0)
Fz(x0,y0,z0)= -1 "
end quote
I understand his moving z to the other side.
But when the take the derivative W.R.T x, what about the z? z is not a variable, z is a functin of x and y, so why don't u have some dz/dx term in there, Fx(x0,y0,z0)=fx(x0,y0) -dz/dx . How did z no longer become a dependent variable on x and y?
"In the special case in which the equation of a surface S is of the form z=f(x,y) (that is, S is the graph of a function f of two variables), we can write the equation as
F(x,y,z) = f(x,y) - z = 0
and regard S as a level surface (with k=0) of F. Then
Fx(x0,y0,z0) = fx(x0,y0)
Fy(x0,y0,z0) = fy(x0,y0)
Fz(x0,y0,z0)= -1 "
end quote
I understand his moving z to the other side.
But when the take the derivative W.R.T x, what about the z? z is not a variable, z is a functin of x and y, so why don't u have some dz/dx term in there, Fx(x0,y0,z0)=fx(x0,y0) -dz/dx . How did z no longer become a dependent variable on x and y?